Sadhana | Page 6

Rabindranath Tagore
as "_peaceful_" [Footnote: Pracantah] and as
"_at-one-with- God_," [Footnote: Yuktatmanah] meaning that they are in perfect
harmony with man and nature, and therefore in undisturbed union with God.
We have a glimpse of the same truth in the teachings of Jesus when he says, "It is easier
for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom

of Heaven"-- which implies that whatever we treasure for ourselves separates us from
others; our possessions are our limitations. He who is bent upon accumulating riches is
unable, with his ego continually bulging, to pass through the gates of comprehension of
the spiritual world, which is the world of perfect harmony; he is shut up within the
narrow walls of his limited acquisitions.
Hence the spirit of the teachings of Upanishad is: In order to find him you must embrace
all. In the pursuit of wealth you really give up everything to gain a few things, and that is
not the way to attain him who is completeness.
Some modern philosophers of Europe, who are directly or indirectly indebted to the
Upanishads, far from realising their debt, maintain that the Brahma of India is a mere
abstraction, a negation of all that is in the world. In a word, that the Infinite Being is to be
found nowhere except in metaphysics. It may be, that such a doctrine has been and still is
prevalent with a section of our countrymen. But this is certainly not in accord with the
pervading spirit of the Indian mind. Instead, it is the practice of realising and affirming
the presence of the infinite in all things which has been its constant inspiration.
We are enjoined to see _whatever there is in the world as being enveloped by God._
[Footnote: Icavasyamidam sarvam yat kincha jagatyan jagat.]
_I bow to God over and over again who is in fire and in water, who permeates the whole
world, who is in the annual crops as well as in the perennial trees._ [Footnote: Yo
devo'gnau y'opsu y'o vicvambhuvanamaviveca ya oshadhishu yo vanaspatishu tasmai
devaya namonamah.]
Can this be God abstracted from the world? Instead, it signifies not merely seeing him in
all things, but saluting him in all the objects of the world. The attitude of the
God-conscious man of the Upanishad towards the universe is one of a deep feeling of
adoration. His object of worship is present everywhere. It is the one living truth that
makes all realities true. This truth is not only of knowledge but of devotion.
'_Namonamah_,'--we bow to him everywhere, and over and over again. It is recognised
in the outburst of the Rishi, who addresses the whole world in a sudden ecstasy of joy:
_Listen to me, ye sons of the immortal spirit, ye who live in the heavenly abode, I have
known the Supreme Person whose light shines forth from beyond the darkness._
[Footnote: Crinvantu vicve amritasya putra a ye divya dhamani tasthuh vedahametam
purusham mahantam aditya varnam tamasah parastat.] Do we not find the overwhelming
delight of a direct and positive experience where there is not the least trace of vagueness
or passivity?
Buddha who developed the practical side of the teaching of Upanishads, preached the
same message when he said, _With everything, whether it is above or below, remote or
near, visible or invisible, thou shalt preserve a relation of unlimited love without any
animosity or without a desire to kill. To live in such a consciousness while standing or
walking, sitting or lying down till you are asleep, is Brahma vihara, or, in other words, is
living and moving and having your joy in the spirit of Brahma._
What is that spirit? The Upanishad says, _The being who is in his essence the light and
life of all, who is world-conscious, is Brahma._ [Footnote: Yacchayamasminnakace
tejomayo'mritamayah purushah sarvanubhuh.] To feel all, to be conscious of everything,
is his spirit. We are immersed in his consciousness body and soul. It is through his
consciousness that the sun attracts the earth; it is through his consciousness that the
light-waves are being transmitted from planet to planet.

Not only in space, but _this light and life, this all-feeling being is in our souls._ [Footnote:
Yacchayamasminnatmani tejomayo'mritamayah purushah sarvanubhuh.] He is
all-conscious in space, or the world of extension; and he is all-conscious in soul, or the
world of intension.
Thus to attain our world-consciousness, we have to unite our feeling with this
all-pervasive infinite feeling. In fact, the only true human progress is coincident with this
widening of the range of feeling. All our poetry, philosophy, science, art and religion are
serving to extend the scope of our consciousness towards higher and larger spheres. Man
does not acquire rights through occupation of larger space, nor
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